But, that’s only the beginning of your branding process. To help you complete creating your awesome brand, give these nine tips a spin as well.
1. How do people see you?
“The interesting thing about your
personal brand is it’s never what you say it is, it’s actually what
everyone else says it is,” writes founder
and chairman of the award-winning matchmaking firm PCBA Paul C.
Brunson. “Therefore, the first place to begin in the building and growth
of your brand is to know what people think of you.”
Paul adds
that you can find out how others view by: “googling yourself, holding a
focus group (of close friends), or asking a life coach or business coach
to conduct a 360 analysis on your behalf (we do this for all of our
clients and it’s very effective).”
2. Build your online platform.
Blogger, author, digital strategist, and speaker Jeff Bullas recommends that
you, “Build your own online platform such as a blog or website that you
own, then amplify your content and engage with your audience on social
networks.” Be adds, “Use LinkedIn, Facebook or Twitter or even Pinterest
and Instagram. You have options. Find what social network resonates
with you.”
“The secret. Don’t wait to be perfect. Just start.”
Here are a couple of pointers to keep in mind when creating your brand;
- Be authentic.
- Have a unique voice.
- Build an email list.
- Have a memorable design.
- Create a memorable slogan that expresses your mission and purpose
- Empower your customers
3. Weave your brand into everything you do.
Personal branding
should be a large part of everything you do. It should be weaved into
your life. It shouldn't just be in the clothes you wear but in your
every action with friends and business colleagues.
Your brand
should show in how you blog online. For example, my personal brand
always is helping entrepreneurs. When I attend networking events I try
to have the same person you read about online, shine at networking
events. If you try to be someone you're not, it will show.
4. Be consistent.
As
a customer, think about the brands that you are most loyal to. Chances
are that they’ve earned your trust because they are dependable. For
example, Zappos is known for delivering superior customer service.
Dropbox includes its signature hand drawn blue box logo on all of its
messaging.
Bot examples prove at just just how important consistency is for brands.
As Hannah Fleishman states on HubSpot, “All of your communications and marketing assets should tell your brand’s story.”
5. Don’t try to please everyone.
Years ago at a marketing conference, my friend Jonathan Long from Market Domination Media told
me that "You're never going to please everyone, so don't try to be
everything to everyone. Learn to be the best brand possible to specific
set of users." This still sticks out to me as myself as a business owner
really can't do everything. If I try and please everyone.... it's not
even possible.
Don’t be afraid to be yourself - even if that means
saying the things that no one else will. Remember, you’re not in
business to please everyone. You're in business to grow a business, not
please everyone.
7. Produce value.
You should be producing value with whatever
you do. You don't have to be Apple to have an amazing product. Even
lower end products like Ikea produce a lot of value to their customers.
When thinking about the value that you can add, ask questions like;
- What sets your product, service and company apart from your competitors?
- What value do you provide and how does that value differ from that provided by your competitors?
- How do these benefits tap into your customer’s emotions?
- Is what I'm producing for my customer produce enough value for the price I'm charging?
- Is my brand in sync with how I'm marketing myself?
8. Associate yourself with strong brands.
“Your personal brand is strengthened or weakened by your connection to other brands,” said Shama Hyder is Founder and CEO of Marketing Zen. “Find and leverage strong brands which can elevate your own personal brand.”
You can begin by looking at the three C’s: company, college, colleagues.
For example, you could contribute content to your alumni or company newsletter or blog.
9. Get sneaky with brand-building awareness.
Finally, you can start spreading brand awareness by using some outside-of-the-box techniques like;- Setting up a referral program.
- Creating an infographic.
- Offering freemium content.
- Partnering with local businesses.
- Wrapping your car with ads.
- Giving away swag.
- Running a social media contest.
- Hosting a podcast.
- Setting up PPC ads and a remarketing campaign.
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